As demands on the transit system increase, service must improve
By Natalie Serafini, Opinions Editor
TransLink recently announced that it will be cutting some of its costs, phasing out a series of services that eased some Vancouveritesâ budgets. Theyâll be eliminating free travel on Sundays and holidays for family members of monthly pass holders, the employee pass program that offered a 15 per cent discount, the FareSaver Tickets, and the West Coast Expressâ seven-day pass and 28-day passes. As the Straight indicated, TransLink made no mention of any pay cuts, although TransLink CEO Ian Jarvis made an impressive $382,954 in 2011.
These service cuts will have an impact on the Vancouverites who have benefited from them, especially the money-saving discounts and free travel. Itâs easy to say people will adjust, and that the Vancouver transit system is better than most other places, but the demands on the transit system are increasing and there needs to be a corresponding improvement in service. For it to improve significantly, there needs to be more buses on the roads, and better communication in theâseemingly more frequentâevent that the SkyTrain is held up.
Lofty and perhaps idealistic aims given the already high prices of transit ticketsâwhich have been gradually getting higher, just as transit police have been tightening up on riding sans proper paymentâand the apprehension about getting the necessary funding from a tax.
Still, the idealism of a better transit system doesnât begin to broach the idealism of Vancouverâs plans to become greener, titled âGreenest City 2020: A Bright Green Future.â As the City of Vancouverâs website states, itâs âa bold initiative that will address Vancouverâs environmental challenges.â Their plans are threefold, aiming to address carbon, waste, and ecosystems. Part of this plan is dependent on an efficient transit system.
You likely see where Iâm going with this criticism: a city canât expect to improve its environmental impact when one of the systems fundamental to this change hasnât significantly improved. Among the City of Vancouverâs manifestos is the intention to âmake the majority of trips (over 50 per cent) by foot, bicycle, and public transit.â
One of the major issues with becoming greener on a personal level is that it requires commitment. Nobody likes that. Itâs not fun having to stand around waiting for a bus in Vancouverâs infamous rain when itâs so much easier to sit in a toasty car. Without incentives or at least convenience, getting to a point where the majority of trips are by foot, bicycle, or public transit will remain a distant Gregor Robertson dream.
Of course Robertsonâs goals have and will continue to take time and funding, but Vancouveritesâ complaints have remained the same, even as he promised to address them: âworking to end street homelessness, addressing housing affordability, improving public transit, [and] making Vancouver the greenest city in the world.â TransLinkâs flaws in the context of Greenest City 2020 and the goal of making Vancouver the greenest city in the world, however heavy on the rhetoric, present one example of how idealistic his goals will prove to be.
Iâm all for Vancouver becoming greener, but Iâm concerned that such initiatives will prove fruitless. Money has been invested in the construction of new SkyTrain lines, and turnstiles have been installed to âincrease efficiency⌠promote security and cut down on fare evasion.â These advancements will show their efficacy or inefficacy as time goes on.
Yet as I call these âadvancements,â turnstiles donât address what are more substantial concerns: buses that are infrequent and quickly reach capacity, or SkyTrains that, when thereâs a hiccup or miscommunication, affect the entire SkyTrain line. If TransLink and the City of Vancouver donât make transiting easier, those who donât want to put in effort wonât be tempted to lessen their car-useâthatâll amount to the majority of people.
Being green isnât impossible, and Iâm wholeheartedly behind the City of Vancouverâs desire to become more environmentally friendly. Yet with TransLink proving itself to be unpredictable and inconvenient, cutting benefits that some Vancouverites need, and investing money where it wonât be most effective, itâs clear that Greenest City is extremely idealistic. Itâs foolhardy to put so many eggs in one basketâparticularly when that basket has so many holes.